For anyone out there complaining about women
drivers, I’m happy to inform you there is a place where you’re almost
guaranteed never to see one. No, not on
a NASCAR track (thanks a lot Danica Patrick), I’m talking about a place far
more dangerous than a small circular track where race cars bump each other at
more than 200 mph; the streets of Haiti.
And while the hazards for Danica are nothing to
sneeze at, the hazards for women drivers in my neck of the woods might actually
make them sneeze. This is because
livestock frequently amble into the crazy mix of cars, bikes, and motos that
populate these pot-hole infested roads -- and I use the term livestock loosely here ‘cause one trot
in the wrong direction and said stock often ends up, well, not live.
But jay-walking donkeys, pedestrian goats, and games
of “chicken” that feature actual chickens aside, there’s no law that says women
can’t drive here, they just don’t. I kid
– no pun intended – but you almost have a better chance of seeing a goat
driving around here as you are a woman.
In the three months I’ve lived here, I’ve only seen one operating a car,
one driving a moto, and zero riding a bicycle (I’m talking women here, not
goats).
In fact, the
only thing less likely to witness on the streets of Gros Morne than a woman
driver is a white person. Put the two
together and the bewildered looks you get from the locals remind me of the
confused stares my kids used to give me when they found me actually cooking
dinner.
The fact that I roll with a posse of four other
white women only adds to the rubber-necking.
The five of us would probably get less attention if we walked onto the
American Idol stage to perform a Kanye West song than we do ambling around
town. But turn that amble into one of us
(yours truly) riding up and down Main Street on a rusty old ten-speed and
you’ve got more than attention, you’ve got a traffic-stopping spectacle. And, as evidenced by all the three-legged
dogs and the sporadic chicken feathers that garnish many a car’s grill, this is
traffic that doesn’t stop for just anything.
It all started when Jen, one of the other, much
younger volunteers, stumbled upon an ancient Huffy. Now, Jen wasn’t bike shopping per say, but in
Haiti, when you walk into a store whose marquee reads “Coke, Sprite,” you might
encounter a fridge-full of refreshing carbonated beverages or you might find
yourself smack dab in the middle of a cleverly disguised second-hand bike
shop.
I guess using the term “second hand” to describe a
bike shop in a third world country is superfluous, but I’m trying to paint a
picture here. And speaking of paint,
this old rust bucket needed some, which is perhaps why Jen didn’t break down
and buy the thing on the spot.
But at dinner that evening, Jen couldn’t stop
thinking about her new found treasure, hoping out loud that some parched soda
shopper wouldn’t discover it and buy it before she could. So, being the cycling enthusiast that I am
(or was, before Father Time revoked my bike lane pass), I asked Jen about the
condition of the chain wheels, sprockets, and how many gears her two-wheeled
crush was running on. Her retort in the
form of a blank stare told me two things:
1) I’m what the kids call a “bike nerd,” and 2) In revealing said
nerdniness, I was now the liaison between Jen and the town bike/soda shop.
That’s how I came to be test-riding that rusty ten
speed up and down Main Street, much to the bewilderment of the locals. It was such a traffic-stopping spectacle,
even the chickens stopped clucking, the goats stopped bleating, and in a single
moment, I became a star. Mr. Spielberg
may have captivated the world with a 10-year-old boy flying a dirt bike across
the moonlit horizon with an extraterrestrial on his handlebars, but on the
streets of Haiti, that doesn’t hold a candle to a gray-haired white woman with
her pant legs rolled up pedaling a rusty Huffy through rush hour.
But this isn’t about me or my performance, this is
about the performance of Jen’s newfound love and whether or not its derailleurs
worked (told you I was a bike nerd).
Much to my surprise, they did, and I was successfully able to not only
capture the attention of the townsfolk and their temporarily-live livestock,
but also get that rusty bucket of bolts into all 10 of its gears.
After spending the going rate for a used bike in a
Haitian soda shop ($50 – Coke, Sprite not included), Jen was nervous to take it
onto the main street. She said it was
because of all the traffic and animals but I know it’s because she was intimidated
by my star making turn as the city’s first female bike rider. Regardless of which version you choose to
believe, we did find a nice quiet place for her to practice; the courtyard of
the local Catholic Church.
Well, I should say it was quiet. Seems my newfound
celebrity had its downside as a crowd of Haitians followed to see what the
crazy white lady would do next. Ah, the
curse of fame. I feel for Angelina Jolie
now that she and I are practically walking in the same shoes.
But I digress, back to Jen and her new brand new,
rusty, old bike. In order to practice
changing gears, I encouraged her to ride in circles in the courtyard. The crowd really liked this development – my
Creole leaves much to be desired but I’m pretty sure they were saying things
like “Look, the crazy old one rides on the street with the goats and the young
one just goes in circles!”
After enough circles to make the crowd dizzy, Jen
was comfortable enough on her new mode of transportation to pedal it home. I was tempted to hop on the handlebars to
hitch a ride but deep down I knew the locals had experienced enough excitement
for one day. One white lady on a bike
may cause a spectacle – two might just cause an accident. And if that happened, you know what they’d
say – “Darn women drivers.”
[written by my son, Matt, but based on a "true story," as they say. He gets paid to write such things, just not by his mom. Thanks, Matt.]
[written by my son, Matt, but based on a "true story," as they say. He gets paid to write such things, just not by his mom. Thanks, Matt.]
| Laurie, Jen and "Rosie" |
You look great, Laurie (although a little devilish). Enjoy the ride! Debbie
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